Land buying question

   / Land buying question #21  
Little debt? Can I assume that your home is paid off or small mortgage. What about a home equity loan?


That's what we did when we bought vacant land out of state. A home equity line of credit. In my case, interest payments are tax deductible.
 
   / Land buying question #22  
As anyone bought farmland that does not have a residence on it? There is some farmland that adjoins my property that I am thinking about buying but I am finding out it is very difficult to obtain a mortgage for land. I have very good credit, very little debt, and a decent income but banks don't even ask for any of that, as soon as I tell them what I am looking at they tell me they can't help me. The only option I have found is a farm credit union that is offering 6.5% for 20 years. Anyone else been through this and found a better option?

Lots of good options brought up already.
 
   / Land buying question #23  
I've seen the same problem off and on over the years. I'm a land surveyor and I've been hired several times to survey a large tract of ground and break the house out from it. The people always said the bank required it since they wouldn't lend money on the farm ground. I suspect most of the time they were going through a different bank for the farm ground then the house. I also bet the interest rates were different. There are a lot of farmers that borrow money for farm ground around here so I know its done.
 
   / Land buying question
  • Thread Starter
#24  
Thanks for the suggestions. I'm looking into whether the mineral rights are included as would be more interested/willing to pay more if so. This land has been in the same family for 50+ years so I would guess the mineral rights are still with it but the real estate agent is pulling the deed to make sure. After talking to the local banks yesterday it seems the farm credit union or home equity loan are my choices. Now I need to talk to my neighbor and find out for sure if he wants to buy 1/3 of the land that adjoins his property, if he does that will put the remaining acres right in the price point I want to be in. If he doesn't want to buy then I need to do some thinking, the entire piece is more than I would like to spend. If it has the mineral rights then I will probably do it but if not I might wait, the whole thing of being financially responsible is no fun. Lol
 
   / Land buying question #25  
When we bought our land, the credit union was useless since we were buying more than 5-10 acres. We ended up with a large southern bank who gave us the loan. The interest rate was a few points higher than house mortgage rates but it has worked out. We are still with the credit union because it is easy for me to access but their service is seriously lacking. If I loose my job, and thus my easy access to the CU, we will move to the so called big bad bank. The bank has given excellent service and rates to use for decades now which is completely different than the CU. We have dealt with many people over the years with the bank and have only had one bad experience with one person. The bank did an awesome job recovering from that one bad person.

Don't be to try other banks or even CU's. Shop around.

Later,
Dan
 
   / Land buying question #26  
Thanks for the suggestions. I'm looking into whether the mineral rights are included as would be more interested/willing to pay more if so. This land has been in the same family for 50+ years so I would guess the mineral rights are still with it but the real estate agent is pulling the deed to make sure. After talking to the local banks yesterday it seems the farm credit union or home equity loan are my choices. Now I need to talk to my neighbor and find out for sure if he wants to buy 1/3 of the land that adjoins his property, if he does that will put the remaining acres right in the price point I want to be in. If he doesn't want to buy then I need to do some thinking, the entire piece is more than I would like to spend. If it has the mineral rights then I will probably do it but if not I might wait, the whole thing of being financially responsible is no fun. Lol

We bought a tract of land and ran into the same issues with our bank. They wanted insurance on the tumbledown house, all kinds of fees, etc. So we put up some CD's and just bought it in fee simple. Little more than a year later we got more from a lease in one year than we paid for the whole place.
 
   / Land buying question
  • Thread Starter
#27  
Another option might be to take a loan from my retirement accounts but I'm not sure that is a good idea and I need to look and see if I have enough money in their to pay for the land. Being 31 I haven't been investing for retirement for too long yet.
 
   / Land buying question #28  
Another option might be to take a loan from my retirement accounts but I'm not sure that is a good idea and I need to look and see if I have enough money in their to pay for the land. Being 31 I haven't been investing for retirement for too long yet.

Likely not the best choice.

David Sent from my iPad Air using TractorByNet
 
   / Land buying question
  • Thread Starter
#29  
Likely not the best choice. David Sent from my iPad Air using TractorByNet

I was mostly joking about the retirement account, it has been making a pretty decent return lately so taking money out will hurt my planned retirement timeframe.
 
   / Land buying question #30  
Don't forget the Small Business loan. That's what I did, I financed the land, a 100'x125' metal buildingn, NO home. I only wanted a 15 year loan, my credit was great, financing was cheap, and I just made the last payment lat month.
 

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